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It's one thing to be 14 years old and a loser. It's one thing to be
the class swot, and hopelessly infatuated with someone who doesn't
know you exist. But what kind of teenager is besotted with an
entire sports team - when the players are even bigger losers than
she is? In 1993, while everyone else was learning Oasis lyrics and
crushing on Kate Moss or Keanu, Emma John was obsessing over the
England cricket team. She spent her free time making posters of the
players she adored. She spent her pocket money on Panini stickers
of them, and followed their progress with a single-mindedness that
bordered on the psychopathic. The primary object of her affection:
Michael Atherton, a boyishly handsome captain who promised to lead
his young troops to glory. But what followed was one of the worst
sporting streaks of all time - a decade of frustration, dismay and
comically bungling performances that made the England cricket team
a byword for British failure. Nearly a quarter of a century on,
Emma John wants to know why she spent her teenage years defending
such a bunch of no-hopers. She seeks out her childhood heroes with
two questions: why did they never win? And why on earth did she
love them so much?
'Searingly self-aware and sharply funny, Emma John takes the
cliches about being a single woman and blows them apart with
unforgettable originality.' - Hadley Freeman 'Fabulous. Made me
well up twice. Honest, vulnerable and all those great things.' -
Eva Wiseman There is a piece of cod-wisdom regularly dispensed to
single women: romance will arrive when you least expect it. I had
assumed it would also make its own travel arrangements too. Emma
John is in her 40s; she is neither married, nor partnered, with
child or planning to be. In her hilarious and unflinching memoir,
Self Contained, she asks why the world only views a woman as
complete when she is no longer a single figure and addresses what
it means to be alone when everyone else isn't. In her book, she
captures what it is to be single in your forties, from sharing a
twin room with someone you've never met on a group holiday (because
the couples have all the doubles with ensuite) to coming to the
realisation that maybe your singleness isn't a temporary
arrangement, that maybe you aren't pre-married at all, and in fact
you are self-contained. The book is an exploration of being
lifelong single and what happens if you don't meet the right
person, don't settle down with the wrong person and realise the
biggest commitment is to yourself.
'Searingly self-aware and sharply funny, Emma John takes the
cliches about being a single woman and blows them apart with
unforgettable originality.' - Hadley Freeman 'Fabulous. Made me
well up twice. Honest, vulnerable and all those great things.' -
Eva Wiseman There is a piece of cod-wisdom regularly dispensed to
single women: romance will arrive when you least expect it. I had
assumed it would also make its own travel arrangements too. Emma
John is in her 40s; she is neither married, nor partnered, with
child or planning to be. In her hilarious and unflinching memoir,
Self Contained, she asks why the world only views a woman as
complete when she is no longer a single figure and addresses what
it means to be alone when everyone else isn't. In her book, she
captures what it is to be single in your forties, from sharing a
twin room with someone you've never met on a group holiday (because
the couples have all the doubles with ensuite) to coming to the
realisation that maybe your singleness isn't a temporary
arrangement, that maybe you aren't pre-married at all, and in fact
you are self-contained. The book is an exploration of being
lifelong single and what happens if you don't meet the right
person, don't settle down with the wrong person and realise the
biggest commitment is to yourself.
Can you feel nostalgic for a life you've never known? Suffused with
her much-loved warmth and wit, Emma John's memoir follows her
moving and memorable journey to master one of the hardest musical
styles on earth - and to find her place in an alien world. Emma had
fallen out of love with her violin when a chance trip to the
American South introduced her to bluegrass music. Classically
trained, highly strung and wedded to London life, Emma was about as
country as a gin martini. So why did it feel like a homecoming?
Answering that question takes Emma deep into the Appalachian
mountains, where she uncovers a hidden culture that confounds every
expectation - and learns some emotional truths of her own.
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